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Trump vows to scrap Obamacare as costs to jump 25 per cent

Donald Trump vowed Tuesday to overturn President Barack Obama's signature health insurance program after the government announced Americans will see costs jump an average of 25 per cent next year.

PHOTO: REUTERS

[WASHINGTON] Donald Trump vowed Tuesday to overturn President Barack Obama's signature health insurance program after the government announced Americans will see costs jump an average of 25 per cent next year.

"Obamacare has to be repealed and replaced and it has to be replaced with something much less expensive for the people, otherwise this country is in even bigger trouble than everybody thought," the Republican presidential candidate said at his golf course in Doral, Florida.

"We're going to repeal and replace Obamacare."

The Department of Health and Human Services said in a new report the big increase in insurance costs will be seen in the 38 states with federally-managed health care exchanges set up under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

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It is the largest jump in premiums for the program, now entering its fourth year, and stoked the already-heated battle between Mr Trump and Democratic rival Hillary Clinton to replace Obama in the White House.

"Obamacare is just blowing up and even the White House, our president, announced 25 or 26 per cent (increases). That number is so wrong. That is such a phony number. You're talking about 60, 70, 80 per cent in increases, not 25 percent," Mr Trump said, without explaining where he got his numbers.

Mr Trump said the increase for Texas will be 60 per cent, but the HHS report said premiums in that state are expected to increase by an average of just 18 per cent.

However, Arizona - which has not voted for a Democrat for president since Bill Clinton in 1996 - will see eye-popping 116 per cent increases.

Arizona Senator John McCain, a Republican, said: "As I have long warned, Obamacare is an unsustainable system that places an unfair financial burden on families and small businesses".

And Mr McCain said the state's largest county has only one insurance provider under Obamacare, when the health care exchanges were supposed to create competition and provide individuals with a choice of insurers.

Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan compared Mr Obama's healthcare program to ill-fated and now-discontinued Samsung phones that were catching fire.

"The president recently compared Obamacare to a Samsung Galaxy Note 7, and he's right: this disastrous law is blowing up. But at least you can return the phone,"Mr Ryan said in a statement.